China Daily

Belarus opposition leader accused of terrorist plot

- By REN QI in Moscow renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Belarusian prosecutor­s on Monday opened an investigat­ion into exiled opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovsk­aya on charges that she was involved in the planning of a terrorist attack.

Tikhanovsk­aya, who stood in the country’s presidenti­al election last year, stands accused alongside some members of a group called BYPOL, an associatio­n of opposition­al former law enforcemen­t officials in Belarus, the country’s news agency BelTA quoted Prosecutor General Andrei Shved as saying.

“The Prosecutor-General’s Office on the basis of materials presented by the State Security Committee and Interior Ministry have opened a criminal case against Tikhanovsk­aya and members of the so-called initiative BYPOL for preparatio­ns for an act of terrorism by an organized group under article 289 of the Criminal Code,” Shved said.

He added: “The aforesaid persons several days ago tried to stage explosions and arson attacks in the capital and other cities”.

On Friday, the Interior Ministry said Belarusian law enforcemen­t agencies prevented two terrorist attacks that a resident of the Brest region had planned to commit in the capital Minsk and at a military garrison in the Minsk region.

“The citizen named Maleichuk who was detained at the crime scene has already agreed to testify and disclosed the names of the organizers of and participan­ts in the terrorist attack,” Shved said.

President Alexander Lukashenko said: “The Belarusian authoritie­s will not go easy on the radical opposition, which has already crossed a red line.

“Horrible miscreants. I told you that they will rock us in various ways. We will not go easy on anyone here, because it will get worse.”

Bomber detected

Lukashenko said the would-be bomber was detected and the explosives defused. The perpetrato­r was handed over to the State Security Committee.

Tikhanovsk­aya, who had claimed the vote in the presidenti­al election in August was rigged, is in neighborin­g Lithuania where she sought refuge.

During a visit to Finland this month, Tikhanovsk­aya said she expected mass protests against Lukashenko to start up again in the spring.

Two days after her comments, the Prosecutor-General’s Office asked the Lithuanian authoritie­s to extradite the exiled opposition leader. The Prosecutor-General’s Office cited Tikhanovsk­aya’s alleged plans, with associates, to instigate riots and capture government buildings in Gomel, Belarus’ second city.

Tikhanovsk­aya has rejected the allegation­s.

Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergi­s said his country “has been and will be a brick wall behind which all democratic forces persecuted by regimes will find refuge”.

“We can say only one thing to the Belarusian regime: hell will first have to freeze over before we consider your requests,” he said.

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